Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart
represents Florida’s 25th Congressional District and is Chairman of the
Transportation, Housing and Urban Development Subcommittee of the House
Committee on Appropriations.
All eight Cuban-American senators and congressmen from both sides of the aisle strongly disagree with Obama
President Barack Obama continues to appease
brutal dictatorships while gaining precious little in return. He
conflates the Cuban dictatorship with the Cuban people when in reality,
their interests are diametrically opposed. With sweeping arrogance,
President Obama acts as though he stands above history with wisdom that
surpasses every American president since Dwight D. Eisenhower, the first
to impose sanctions on the Fidel Castro regime. Obama’s foreign policy
is radical even compared to his own party. President John F. Kennedy
imposed many of the first stringent sanctions against the Castro regime,
and President Bill Clinton signed into law the LIBERTAD Act, which
codified sanctions that Obama now opposes.
All
eight Cuban-American senators and congressmen from both sides of the
aisle, strongly disagree with him. One would think that he might consult
with us.
The
Cuban people simply want to gather peacefully, speak their minds,
practice their faiths, access the Internet, and enjoy the fruits of
their labor. The ailing octogenarians that run Cuba would never allow
those simple liberties. A key point often overlooked is that, under
current law, the president can lift sanctions once free, fair elections
are scheduled, political prisoners are released, and independent press,
organized labor, and political parties are legalized in Cuba. The Cuban
people deserve no less, yet Obama abandoned the U.S. commitment to those
basic goals when he abandoned his most significant leverage to advance
them.
Obama’s capitulation to dictators apparently has no bounds. In 2001,
five Cuban spies were convicted for conspiracy to commit espionage. One
of those five convicted spies, Gerardo Hernandez, was additionally
serving two life sentences for the murders of innocent Americans and a
legal permanent resident in the shoot-down of civilian aircraft over
international waters. Obama’s State and Justice Departments arranged,
while Hernandez was in federal prison, to help him have his wife in Cuba
artificially inseminated. Shortly thereafter, in another striking
concession, Obama commuted his sentence and ordered his release. When
has any president been so embarrassingly eager to appease a brutal,
anti-American, repressive dictatorship?
Obama’s policies also hurt the Cuban people by emboldening a regime
already ready to oppress them. Since the president’s Dec. 17, 2014
announcement, there have been approximately 1,300 political arrests in
Cuba. During the Obama administration, five pro-democracy activists have
died – Orlando Zapata Tamayo, Juan Wilfredo Soto Garcia, Laura Pollan,
Oswaldo Payá and Harold Cepero. The Castro regime exports its brand of
violence abroad to Venezuela, where it subverts democratic institutions
and helps to repress the Venezuelan people. And just recently, with the
president’s implicit blessing, the Castro dictatorship brazenly flexed
its impunity at the summit in Panama by beating pro-democracy activists,
including American citizens, and ejecting an American journalist from
an international press conference. Three days later, the regime was
rewarded for those human rights abuses with another monumental
concession: removal from the state sponsors of terror list.
Removal from the terrorism list is especially disturbing when the
Castro regime continues to provide safe harbor to one of the FBI’s most
wanted terrorists, Joanne Chesimard, terrorist bomb-maker William
Morales, and more than 70 other fugitives from U.S. justice. It also has
ties to ETA and FARC terrorists, supports other rogue states including
Syria, Iran, Venezuela, and North Korea, and provides support to Hamas
and Hezbollah. In July 2013, Panamanian authorities discovered that the
North Korean ship Chong Chon Gang was carrying military weapons that it
had loaded from Cuba. A UN panel of experts determined that the shipment
was the biggest violation of those international sanctions to date.
Further, the Castro regime maintains an extensive espionage network
against the United States. Ana Belen Montes (Defense Intelligence Agency
analyst, serving a 25-year sentence for conspiracy to commit
espionage), the five convicted “WASP” network spies, Walter and
Gwendolyn Myers (State Department analyst and his wife serving sentences
for conspiracy to commit espionage), Elsa and Carlos Alvarez (Florida
International University professor and his wife, serving sentences), and
Marta Rita Velazquez (USAID, indicted but fled to Sweden) are a few
examples of those who have spied on the Castros’ behalf against the U.S.
in the past 15 years.
Obama’s strategy has been an abysmal failure wherever it has been
tried. During the horrific slaughter of Iranian protesters during the
summer of 2009, President Obama was nowhere to be found throughout most
of that turmoil. When he finally decided to speak, he declared, “the
United States respects the sovereignty of the Islamic Republic of Iran,
and is not interfering with Iran’s affairs.” Defending liberty is hardly
“interference,” whether referring to the mullahs in Iran or the Castro
brothers. Instead, it is the minimum required from those of us living in
freedom. As President Obama negotiates with the murderers in Tehran and
Havana, he has excised those regimes’ terrorism abroad and atrocities
at home – points any U.S. president should find salient – from the
negotiating table.
One thing is clear: The president will barrel along with his failed
foreign policy agenda regardless of the harm to American security
interests, damage to pro-democracy movements, and the diminishing trust
of our allies. Obama’s foreign policy is an aberration in America’s long
and proud history of supporting freedom across the globe. The U.S.
Congress continues to stand with the oppressed people of the world
struggling for freedom, and will do all it can to keep the president
from bargaining away every ounce of leverage we have to the world’s
worst actors.
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